Panel vows no private school vouchers for dropouts
By GARY SCHARRER
Houston Chronicle Austin Bureau
AUSTIN ˜ Texas won't use private school vouchers to
educate high school dropouts, a state education
council insisted Tuesday while adopting a strategic
plan aimed at increasing graduation rates.
But a group critical of school vouchers remains
skeptical.
The High School Completion and Success Initiative
Council advocates multiple approaches to address the
dropout problem, including "alternative delivery
systems," which the Texas Freedom Network believes is
code language for "school vouchers."
Vouchers allow parents to send children to private and
religious schools with public money paying for at
least a portion of the tuition.
"I cannot see this language (in the strategic plan)
as, in any way, opening the door for anything that we
would be putting under the heading of vouchers," said
council member Don McAdams.
McAdams is president of the Houston-based Center for
Reform of School Systems, and a former president of
the Houston Independent School District board of
trustees.
"If we are going to go down this path, I think it will
create so much controversy that it will distract from
the work of our council, which is another good reason
why we should stay away from (vouchers)," McAdams
said.
The strategic plan does allow the Texas Education
Agency to fund nonprofit groups to educate school
dropouts.
And that's "not giving money to a parent to shop
around" such as a traditional voucher program would
allow, noted Education Commissioner Robert Scott,
chairman of the High School Completion and Success
Initiative Council.
gscharrer@express-news.net
This blog on Texas education contains posts on accountability, testing, K-12 education, postsecondary educational attainment, dropouts, bilingual education, immigration, school finance, environmental issues, Ethnic Studies at state and national levels. It also represents my digital footprint, of life and career, as a community-engaged scholar in the College of Education at the University of Texas at Austin.
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